Western Cape

The Western Cape is one of South Africa’s nine provinces. It was once part of the old Cape Province. It became a separate province in 1994. Cape Town is the capital of the Western Cape. Cape Town is also one of South Africa’s three capital cities. The South African Parliament meets in Cape Town.

The Western Cape has many plains, mountain ranges, fertile valleys, and large beaches. In the interior are the plains of the Karoo. The mountain ranges include the Cedar, Hex River, Tsitsikamma, Outeniqua, and Swartberg. The Cango Caves near Oudtshoorn are in the Swartberg Mountains. Table Mountain, in the southwest, is a national monument. It is part of a mountain range that is also a national park, the Table Mountain National Park.

The Western Cape is the location of the Cape Floral Kingdom. This region has more plant species, or types, than the whole of Europe. Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden is within the region.

The main rivers in the Western Cape are the Olifants, Berg, Breë, and Gourits rivers. Table Bay is the harbor at Cape Town. Robben Island, in the bay, is about 6 miles (10 kilometers) from Cape Town.

Besides Cape Town, the Western Cape has a number of other important towns. These include Stellenbosch, Paarl, Beaufort West, George, Oudtshoorn, Saldanha Bay, Wellington, Moorreesburg, Clanwilliam, Knysna, and Worcester.

The people of the Western Cape come from various backgrounds. Centuries of trade and immigration brought people from different parts of Europe, Southeast Asia, India, and Africa to the Western Cape. A large number of the people have mixed black and white ancestry. Others are black, white, or Asian. The people of Asian descent are mostly Indian. Most people in the Western Cape speak Afrikaans. Xhosa and English are the other important languages.

Agriculture and Fisheries

Agriculture is important to the economy of the Western Cape. The sheltered valleys are ideal for growing apples, olives, peaches, oranges, and grapes. The province is famous for its wine. Vegetables are grown in the eastern parts of the province. Wheat fields in the Western Cape produce wheat for the bread and flour that are used all over the country. The province also produces wool, mutton, chicken, eggs, dairy products, beef, pork, and ostrich products. In addition, the Western Cape is the only South African province that exports horses.

The country’s largest native forests are found in the province. Valuable furniture is made of yellowwood, stinkwood, and other kinds of wood.

The ocean off the western coast is good for fishing because it is rich in plankton. Plankton is a food source for large fish. Lobster, squid, octopus, oysters, mussels, and a variety of fish are caught there.

Industries

Many of South Africa’s major insurance companies and bank headquarters are in the Western Cape. Most of the country’s oil companies have their headquarters in Cape Town. The bulk of the printing and publishing industry is also there. Information and communication technologies are the fastest growing parts of the economy in the Western Cape.

The Western Cape has the country’s third largest manufacturing sector, after the provinces of Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal. The clothing and textile industry provides a lot of work, although it has declined. Other industries include footwear, motor vehicles, tires, fertilizers, pesticides, and drugs. Shipbuilding and related industries also contribute to the country’s economy. The only nuclear power plant in Africa is at Koeberg on the west coast. It began operating in 1984.

The Western Cape plays an important role in the medical field. In 1967 Dr. Christiaan Barnard performed the world’s first heart transplant in Cape Town’s Groote Schuur Hospital. The Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital in Cape Town treats children from many parts of the country and the continent.

Tourism

The Western Cape is very popular among tourists. They enjoy the natural beauty, interesting and varied culture, and excellent wines. The province has several nature reserves, such as the Cape Point nature reserve and West Coast National Park. The Garden Route, a drive along the coast, is known for its beautiful views and interesting towns.

The waterfront and aquarium in Cape Town attract millions of visitors every year. Visitors to the capital also can take a cable car to the top of Table Mountain. Historic buildings and museums show the province’s rich history.

The Cape Minstrels welcome the New Year with their colorful processions through the streets of Cape Town. They call this carnival Tweede Nuwejaar (“second New Year”). The carnival began long ago, when slaves got a free day on January 2 to celebrate in the streets.

Humans may have been living in the Western Cape region more than 70,000 years ago. The inland areas were occupied for a long time by the San and Khoekhoe peoples.

The Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias reached the southern tip of Africa in 1488. The first European settlement was founded in 1652 at Table Bay by the Dutch East India Company. It was set up to provide fresh food and water for ships that traveled between Europe and Asia.

It was difficult for white settlers to grow enough crops to supply the ships by themselves. They brought people from other places and made them work as slaves. The first slaves were from western Africa. Later slaves were taken from Madagascar, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), and the Dutch East Indies. The farmers also bought cattle from the Khoekhoe to use on their farms, but these were not enough. The Dutch East India Company appointed farmers to breed their own animals.

Great Britain took the Cape settlement from the Dutch in 1795. In 1803 Britain returned the Cape to the Netherlands, but it retook control in 1806. In the late 1700s a series of wars between Europeans and the Xhosa had broken out along the borders of the Cape Colony. These conflicts continued into the late 1800s.

Britain banned slavery in 1834. The Dutch settlers, called Boers, were opposed to that policy. They also objected to other British policies and wanted to find new pasturelands. Those issues led to the Great Trek of the late 1830s. Thousands of Boers, called Voortrekkers, left the Cape Colony. The Voortrekkers later set up the republics of the Transvaal, the Orange Free State, and Natal.

In 1910 the Union of South Africa was formed. The Cape Colony became one of its four provinces. It was known as the Cape of Good Hope Province, or the Cape Province. In 1994 the Cape Province was divided into the Western Cape, Eastern Cape, and Northern Cape. A part of the Cape Province was also transferred to the new North West province.

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